A woman has been kicked off a plane to Syracuse for complaining about being seated near a mother and her baby.

Marissa Rundell, a 19-year-old mom from Rochester, shared video of the incident last week, showing an angry passenger "screaming" at staff on a Delta Air Lines flight from New York's JFK Airport to Syracuse's Hancock Airport. She said she was traveling with her 8-month-old son.

"This lady thought she was going to be rude to me and Mason now she has no way home today. Thank you to the lovely Delta flight attendant for not letting this women bully us," Rundell wrote Tuesday, Feb. 6.

"Karma is a b****."

Rundell told the Daily Mail on Wednesday that the incident began immediately when the other woman boarded the plane. She was the last to get on the plane, and was shouting and swearing.

"She came to the back and slammed her bags down. She said 'this is f----- ridiculous. It's bulls--- having to sit in the back of the plane,'" Rundell recalled.

When Rundell asked the other passenger to stop swearing around her young child, the woman allegedly said "shut the f--- up and shove it."

Video shows the woman asking for another seat, telling a flight attendant that she's "not sitting near a crying baby." The attendant says the woman can take the next flight, but the woman refuses and asks for the employee's name -- Tabitha -- and ID number.

"Thank you, Tabitha," the woman says. "You may not have a job tomorrow."

Tabitha then tells another crew member that she wants the woman, who has not been identified, removed from the flight.

"She was screaming at the baby," Tabitha says.

"I'm not screaming. I'll be quiet now. Please. OK? I'm sorry. I was really stressed out," the woman says in a desperate plea.

Photo: Marissa Rundell and her 8-month old son, Mason

Rundell told the Daily Mail that the woman continued arguing when a gate agent came to remove her from the flight. She finally left after getting her bags.

"I thought it was funny how she was acting like a child throwing a tantrum," Rundell said.

According to Fox News, the flight was operated by Endeavor Air, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Delta. A spokesperson for the airline said the woman was removed for not following the company's standards requested of its passengers and crew.

"We ask that customers embrace civility and respect one another when flying Delta," a Delta spokesperson told Fox News. "This customer's behavior toward a fellow customer on a flight from New York to Syracuse was not in keeping with those standards. We appreciate our Endeavor Air flight attendant's commitment to Delta's core values and apologize to the other customers on board Flight 4017 who experienced the disturbance."